Youtube Will Now Detect AI Avatars Of Celebrities To Stop Misuse
YouTube and the Creative Artists Agency (CAA) are working together to launch tools that assist celebrities and creators in identifying AI-generated content that uses their voice, picture, or likeness.
The collaboration seeks to provide people more control over the use of their digital image, particularly as AI technology advances.
Youtube To Start Detecting AI Avatars of Celebrities
YouTube will begin testing these capabilities with sportsmen and celebrities in early 2025, enabling them to spot AI-generated videos that look like them and ask for the content to be taken down.
In order to solve concerns like impersonation and image usage, YouTube intends to expand the program to include top creators, creative professionals, and other significant personalities after the initial phase.
YouTube has been expanding its initiative to include tools to control AI-generated representations of creators, including their voices, which it first announced in September 2023.
Because AI techniques can produce incredibly lifelike images of people, precautions must be taken to prevent unauthorized use of a person’s face, voice, or body.
With its CAAVault system, which keeps comprehensive digital records of clients’ likenesses—including their faces, bodies, and voices—to assist monitor and regulate their use online, CAA plays a crucial part in this endeavour.
YouTube To Implement Synthetic Singing Identification Technology
YouTube plans to implement “synthetic-singing identification technology” in order to handle another developing issue: AI that mimics the singing voices of creators or artists.
YouTube’s new capabilities will help music labels that have begun to request the removal of AI-generated songs that imitate musicians.
YouTube now mandates that producers tag videos with AI-generated content in the description or metadata in order to maintain openness.
Youtube Joins Forces With NCERT To Launch 29 Regional Channels
Google has formed a strategic partnership with the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) to improve access to quality education throughout India. The collaboration is designed to empower students, teachers, and parents by offering engaging and accessible educational content.
In a Google blog post, Jonathan Katzman, Director of Product Management for YouTube Learning, stated, “Learning has always been central to YouTube. In India, where accessible education is key to unlocking the nation’s potential, YouTube can play a crucial role in making learning content more accessible through innovative partnerships, tools, and resources.”
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